In the future, the BDD tests will simply set up the required
test database themselves. Like with the template database, it
is not reimported when it already exists unless that is explicitly
forced.
Makes most of the API tests currently fail because they still
point to old test data.
Introduces a new class DBRow that encapsulates the comparison
functions. This also is responsible for formatting more informative
assert messages. place and placex steps are unified.
Put the connection to the test database into auto-commit mode
and get rid of the explicit commits. Also use cursors always in
context managers and unify the two implementations that copy
data from the place table.
The project directory contains the website script as
configured through the test configuration. This means
that tests are now completely independet of any
configuration that may be contained in the build
directory.
Also removes the hack to inject additional settings via
a environment variable.
The default location of osm2pgsql and the postgresql module
is decided at compile/installation time and is not necessarily
in the project directory.
With this change it is now possible to have a project directory
that is completely separate from the build directory.
Instead of creating the website wrapper scripts with cmake,
they are now created when --setup-website is called. The
setup of the configuration constants is directly embedded
into the scripts. This means we can get rid of the separate
settings-frontend.php. More importantly however, it means
that it is now possible to set up multiple website directories
from the same build directory.
DB tests now can simply set the environment to change configuration
variables. API tests still rely on a configuration file.
Also, query.php needs to set up the CONST_* variables to work with
the query scripts. That is a tiny bit messy and duplicates code
but this part will need to be reworked later.
As we can't refer to the project root dir in the module path, the
module path may now also be a relative directory which is then
taken as being relative to the project root path.
Moves the checkModulePresence() function into the Setup class, so
that it can work on the computed absolute module path.
This adds the notion of a project directory. This is the directory
that holds all necessary files for one specific installation of
Nominatim. Dotenv looks for an .env file in this directory and
adds it to the global environment together with the defaults from
Nominatim's data directory.
Add's symfony's dotenv library as a new dependency.
The setup relies on the project configuration which we want to
explicitly set up in later steps. Therefore proxy setup needs to
be done explicitly as well. There is the added bonus that the
setup is done only for the utils which try to call outside.